Detailed Record



Modulation of cortical representations of sensory and contextual information underlies aversive associative learning


Abstract Cortical neurons encode both sensory and contextual information, yet it remains unclear how experiences modulate these cortical representations. Here, we demonstrate that trace eyeblink conditioning (TEC), an aversive associative-learning paradigm linking conditioned (CS) with unconditioned stimuli (US), finely tunes cortical coding at both population and single-neuron levels. Initially, we show that the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) is necessary for TEC acquisition, as evidenced by local muscimol administration. At the population level, TEC enhances activity in a small subset (∼20%) of CS- or US-responsive primary neurons (rPNs) while diminishing activity in non-rPNs, including locomotion-tuned or unresponsive PNs. Crucially, TEC learning modulates the encoding of sensory versus contextual information in single rPNs: CS-responsive neurons become less responsive, while US-responsive neurons gain responses to CS. Moreover, we find that the cholinergic pathway, via nicotinic receptors, underlies TEC-induced modulations. These findings suggest that experiences dynamically tune cortical representations through cholinergic pathways.
Authors Jiaman Dai University of WyomingORCID , Qian‐Quan Sun University of WyomingORCID
Journal Info Cell Press | Cell Reports , vol: 43 , iss: 9 , pages: 114672 - 114672
Publication Date 8/27/2024
ISSN 2211-1247
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access gold Gold Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2024.114672
KeywordsKeyword Image Associative learning (Score: 0.49627978) , Associative property (Score: 0.4222089)